BOOK I CHAPTER III
Proof that there is a God.
That there is a God, then, is no matter of doubt to those who receive the Holy Scriptures, the Old Testament, I mean, and the New; nor indeed to most of the Greeks. For, as we said, the knowledge of the existence of God is implanted in us by nature. But since the wickedness of the Evil One has prevailed so mightily against man's nature as even to drive some into denying the existence of God, that most foolish and woe-fulest pit of destruction (whose folly David, revealer of the Divine meaning, exposed when he said, The fool said in his heart, There is no God), so the disciples of the Lord and His Apostles, made wise by the Holy Spirit and working wonders in His power and grace, took them captive in the net of miracles and drew them up out of the depths of ignorance to the light of the knowledge of God. In like manner also their successors in grace and worth, both pastors and teachers, having received the enlightening grace of the Spirit, were wont, alike by the power of miracles and the word of grace, to enlighten those walking in darkness and to bring back the wanderers into the way. But as for us who are not recipients either of the gift of miracles or the gift of teaching (for indeed we have rendered ourselves unworthy of these by our passion for pleasure), come, let us in connection with this theme discuss a few of those things which have been delivered to us on this subject by the expounders of grace, calling on the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
All things,
that exist, are either created or uncreated. If, then, things are created, it
follows that they are also wholly mutable. For things, whose existence
originated in change, must also be subject to change, whether it be that they
perish or that they become other than they are by act of wills. But if things
are uncreated they must in all consistency be also wholly immutable. For things
which are opposed in the nature of their existence must also be opposed in the
mode of their existence, that is to say, must have opposite properties: who, then,
will refuse to grant that all existing things, not only such as come within the
province of the senses, but even the very angels, are subject to change and
transformation and movement of various kinds? For the things appertaining to
the rational world, I mean angels and spirits and demons, are subject to
changes of will, whether it is a progression or a retrogression in goodness,
whether a struggle or a surrender; while the others suffer changes of
generation and destruction, of increase and decrease, of quality and of
movement in space. Things then that are mutable are also wholly created. But
things that are created must be the work of some maker, and the maker cannot
have been created. For if he had been created, he also must surely have been
created by some one, and so on till we arrive at something uncreated. The
Creator, then, being uncreated, is also wholly immutable. And what could this
be other than Deity?
And even the
very continuity of the creation, and its preservation and government, teach us
that there does exist a Deity, who supports and maintains and preserves and
ever provides for this universe. For how could opposite natures, such
as fire and water, air and earth, have combined with each other so as to form
one complete world, and continue to abide in indissoluble union, were there not
some omnipotent power which bound them together and always is preserving them
from dissolution?
What is it
that gave order to things of heaven and things of earth, and all those things
that move in the air and in the water, or rather to what was in existence
before these, viz., to heaven and earth and air and the elements of fire and
water? What was it that mingled and distributed these? What was it that
set these in motion and keeps them in their unceasing and unhindered course?
Was it not the Artificer of these things, and He Who hath implanted in
everything the law whereby the universe is carried on and directed? Who then is
the Artificer of these things? Is it not He Who created them and brought them
into existence. For we shall not attribute such a power to the spontaneous.
For, supposing their coming into existence was due to the spontaneous; what of
the power that put all in orders? And let us grant this, if you
please. What of that which has preserved and kept them in harmony with the
original laws of their existence? Clearly it is something quite
distinct from the spontaneous. And what could this be other than
Deity?
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